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This might be a little tougher than Putin thought...

It’s been mentioned a few times that Russia has a limited number of these. Somewhere around 50 combat ready KA-52s. The last tally I saw was they’d lost at least half of them. The Ukrainian offensive means the Russians have had to use these advanced choppers close to the lines, and they are losing them at a much faster rate, now.
 
It’s been mentioned a few times that Russia has a limited number of these. Somewhere around 50 combat ready KA-52s. The last tally I saw was they’d lost at least half of them. The Ukrainian offensive means the Russians have had to use these advanced choppers close to the lines, and they are losing them at a much faster rate, now.
After this war, I think we can established the Russian advanced technology was putting window dressing on their 80s-90s tech and they have been left behind last 30 years.

I don’t think it is an exaggeration to say the stuff we used in first Gulf War was more advance than what the Russian Army unleashed on Ukraine.

The other factor and big part of lack of air superiority is the maintenance capabilities of entire army is low, as you point out. I don’t think NATO / US understood just what a paper tiger Russia had become in terms of tech not advancing like they claimed and ability to maintain their best weapons.
 
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R.2695df0a67b9e57f09981ae635ebff4e


Putler you idiot.
 
"The railway station in Rykove settlement, Genichesky district, where the ZSU destroyed a large racist warehouse of BC The scale is impressive, and the fact that the detonated one will not fly in our direction is gratifying."

 
Two weeks since the counter-offensive began, Ukraine is making modest but steady progress in three areas of attack across the 1,000km (620 mile) front line.
Troops are launching probing attacks, while most of Ukraine's forces are being held in reserve, waiting for a big enough opening in Russian defences to launch a main attack and try to recapture land in the south of the country.
The fighting has been hard, with heavy casualties on both sides, and opposing armies claiming the upper hand. Ukraine's advance in southern Donetsk has stuttered, but continues.
The BBC joined the 68th Jaeger Brigade as its combat forces sought to expand their control eastward of the recently regained village of Blahodatne.


Read the rest here…good read
 
Russia is afraid of National Guard troops going to their summer camps.

"Military convoys have been observed in 27 states of the United States and both the president #Biden and #Pentágono have not commented on it."

 
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"Subsequently, regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov reported seven casualties, and as usual accused the Ukrainian military of being responsible. Five apartment buildings and four private houses were allegedly damaged.

Previously, the Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK) reported a raid in Belgorod Oblast and the "liberation" of several settlements. During their operation, local authorities regularly reported shelling of settlements, calling the Russian volunteer fighters "Ukrainian saboteurs."

 
Russia is afraid of National Guard troops going to their summer camps.

"Military convoys have been observed in 27 states of the United States and both the president #Biden and #Pentágono have not commented on it."

Just wait until they find out about the thousands of troops of teenage paramilitary soldiers heading off to summer camps throughout this year where they will earn many merit badges.
 
This is fairly bizarre, but, maybe not considering it is Russia and involves a dictator. Vera Nikolaevna passed away on May 31st. Who is she? Well, according to her she was Vladimir Putin's birth mother, and that she raised him until passing him along to her parents, who could not handle him do to their age and shipped him off to a boarding school. At some point he was adopted by Vladimir and Maria Putin.
Very little is known about Putin's background, particularly his early years. In true Russian fashion two journalists who were researching his background died under mysterious circumstances. Vera claimed that Vladimir was the result of an affair, and that when she found out the man was married she broke it off, only to find out she was also pregnant. She married a Georgian man who initially accepted the bastard Vladimir as his own. There appear to be school records showing a young man of the same name at a school in Vera's village for a few years.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...ical-mother-–-obituary/ar-AA1bZoNU?li=BBnb7Kz
 
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